How did Neil deGrasse Tyson get hooked on science? Find out when the director of the Hayden Planetarium and host of StarTalk Radio answers a fan's question on how to become an astrophysicist. Plus, Neil answers comic co-host Chuck Nice's question about how to develop a love of science and physics before it's too late! Enjoy this StarTalk Radio "Behind the Scenes" video, which was shot the same day as we recorded our episode, "Cosmic Queries: Time-Keeping."
If you'd like to listen to that day's podcast (minus this clip), click here: http://www.startalkradio.net/show/cosmic-queries-time-keeping/. If you love StarTalk Radio, don't miss out on any StarTalk news. Sign up for our free newsletter: http://www.startalkradio.net/newsletter/youtube/
Catch up with StarTalk Radio around the web:
iTunes - http://bit.ly/SOHDg6
SoundCloud - https://soundcloud.com/startalk
Stitcher - http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/startalk
Twitter - https://twitter.com/#!/StarTalkRadio
Facebook - http://www.facebook.com/StarTalkRadio
Google+ - http://goo.gl/ZP59S
Pinterest - http://pinterest.com/startalk/

published:28 Mar 2013

views:107352

Subscribe Now:
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=ehoweducation
Watch More:
http://www.youtube.com/ehoweducation
Determining a star's radius is something that you can't actually do directly. Find out how to determine a star's radius with help from an experienced and passionate educator in this free video clip.
Expert: Eylene Pirez
Filmmaker: bjorn wilde
SeriesDescription: Astronomy and astrophysics are very interesting and complicated topics that are more than worth exploring. Get tips on astronomy and astrophysics with help from an experienced and passionate educator in this free video series.

A lecture by Brian Cox on how the universe was created.
If you like this video please help me grow my channel by hitting that like button. Thanks guys! Oh & dont forget all comments are welcome so leave one, or even ask a question & answer a few

published:24 Feb 2013

views:1145523

What is an astrophysicist? Are all astrophysicists also physicists? Can you be one without having a PhD? Find out when your own personal astrophysicist, Neil deGrasse Tyson, explains the process to Chuck Nice. In return, Chuck schools Neil on what a “Padawan” is. (The force is strong with Chuck.)
This "Behind the Scenes" video was shot during the recording of our episode, "Cosmic Queries: Super Powers." If you'd like to listen to the full podcast, click here: http://www.startalkradio.net/show/cosmic-queries-super-powers/
If you love StarTalk Radio, don't miss out on any StarTalk news. Sign up for our free newsletter: http://www.startalkradio.net/newsletter/youtube/
Catch up with StarTalk Radio around the web:
iTunes - http://bit.ly/SOHDg6
SoundCloud - https://soundcloud.com/startalk
Stitcher - http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/startalk
TuneIn - http://tunein.com/radio/StarTalk-Radio-p334521/
Twitter - https://twitter.com/StarTalkRadio
Facebook - http://www.facebook.com/StarTalkRadio
Google+ - http://googleplus.startalkradio.net
Pinterest - http://pinterest.com/startalk/
Tumblr - http://startalkradio.tumblr.com/
Instagram - http://instagram.com/startalkradio

Don't miss new BigThink videos! Subscribe by clicking here: http://goo.gl/CPTsV5
The astrophysicist debunks the notion that scientists cannot be believers.

published:03 Jun 2011

views:839525

Who would have thought that studying Physics via Natural Sciences at CambridgeUniversity isn't exactly easy?
Hi guys! This week's How to Cambridge vlog is slightly different to the episodes I've put up so far, in that this week I filmed an entire day of my life rather than snippets over a few days. This is because I've been planning to film a "day in the life" style video for a long time, so you guys get a very comprehensive understanding of what it means to be a Cambridge Physicist.
I started the day off with a big bowl of porridge, and then headed to the library to do some supervision work, as well as some admin. I also checked my pigeonhole (or "pidge"), since I'd received some mail from graduate employers. It turns out, there are perks of going to Cambridge - you'll get free chocolates and playing cards because companies really want you to work for them.
After a very productive library session, I headed to the Cavendish (the Cambridge Physics department) for a lecture on Advanced QuantumCondensed Matter Physics. Let's just say, the lecturer is a legend!
Straight after this, I had a Relativistic Astrophysics and Cosmology supervision in the secondary site belonging to the Cavendish, but I had time to kill so I shot some pretty scenery for a while.
Finally, I ended the day with a Jesus College badminton session and a pizza. I think I deserved it after a long day of hard work, not having had a pizza in many months.
If you guys enjoyed this video, please give it a thumbs up and don't forget to leave me a comment telling me one thing you've been working on recently / one thing you'd like to work on in order to make yourself a better / more well rounded person!
The music in my vlogs is all original, i.e. written and recorded by myself. I record in Garageband. I film my videos on my Canon EOS M10 and iPhone 5s. I edit them in Shotcut, iMovie, and Adobe Lightroom.
Follow me on Instagram, Snapchat, and Twitter: @parthvlogs

published:23 Oct 2017

views:7282

David Spergel '82 is a Professor of Astrophysics and Chair of the Department of Astrophysics at Princeton.
Q. How do you actually spend your days?
A. What I end up spending my day with varies from teaching, - right now I'm teaching the big Introductory Astronomy Class - so you're going in front of a lot of people and speaking; a lot of mentorship, a lot of working one-on-one with people from undergraduates to graduate students to postdocs. Now many of my former students are faculty members and I'll end up talking to them about their career…So mentoring people and working with them on projects, and developing them as scientists is a big part of what I do. At this point, also, I do a lot of things that might be really “political”. I am Chair of what's called the Space Studies Board and the National Academy of Sciences. The National Academy was set up by Abraham Lincoln to advise the federal government on science policy. In April, I was in Washington for nine days, and talked to people on the The Hill, the HouseScience Staff, the Senate Science Staff, talked to folks at OMBand OSTP at the White House. I spent a number of days at NASA headquarters talking to people there, and also served on the NASA Advisory Council. One of the other things that I do with NASA is running the Science DefinitionTeam for a big project. This is a project that’s really the successor to the Hubble Space Telescope in many ways. NASA was given a gift from the National Reconnaissance Organization of two telescopes that had not been launched, and I've been working on how we can use these telescopes to study everything from extrasolar planets to the basic properties of the universe (in terms of fielding questions on cosmology), and that work involves working with a team of really excellent people throughout the country: my co-chair at NASA and about 30 scientists at NASA and universities, and more broadly interesting, involving the whole astronomy communities: running conferences with a couple hundred people, writing reports, engaging people, building the political support and the scientific interest in the astronomy community to enable this mission. And this mission will be a two billion dollar mission, so this is a big project, and making things of this scale happen requires drawing together a consensus; bringing together a lot of people to work towards a common goal. So it's an interesting combination of scientific vision and political consensus-building skills. This is not something that was part of my physics classes. I've learned somewhat over the years about doing things like being a department chair, but in many ways I felt that Princeton prepared me for it in the other classes I took, and the other activities I was involved with outside of my core courses.
Find Mr. Spergel’s full interview here: https://careerservices.princeton.edu/node/2341
----------------------------------------­-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CAREER & LIFE VISION CONVERSATIONS is a video series by Princeton Career Services highlighting lessons learned by inspiring Princetonians. For the whole series visit: https://careerservices.princeton.edu/node/2191
----------------------------------------­-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Produced by LisaEinstein '13
Music by http://www.bensound.com/royalty-free-music
----------------------------------------­-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

published:30 Jun 2016

views:1200

How do you visualize distant worlds that you can't see? A team of artists uses scientific data to imagine exoplanets and other astrophysical phenomena.
The moon hanging in the night sky sent Robert Hurt’s mind into deep space -- to a region some 40 light years away, in fact, where seven Earth-sized planets crowded close to a dim, red sun.
Hurt, a visualization scientist at Caltech’s IPAC center, was walking outside his home in Mar Vista, California, shortly after he learned of the discovery of these rocky worlds around a star called TRAPPIST-1 and got the assignment to visualize them. The planets had been revealed by NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope and ground-based observatories.
“I just stopped dead in my tracks, and I just stared at it,” Hurt said in an interview. “I was imagining that could be, not our moon, but the next planet over – what it would be like to be in a system where you could look up and see continental features on the next planet.”
So began a kind of inspirational avalanche. Hurt and his colleague, multimedia producer Tim Pyle, developed a series of arresting, photorealistic images of what the new system’s tightly packed planets might look like -- so tightly packed that they would loom large in each other’s skies. Their visions of the TRAPPIST-1 system would appear in leading news outlets around the world.
Subscribe For More Videos Like This: http://www.youtube.com/user/ouramazingspace?sub_confirmation=1
See my latest videos : https://www.youtube.com/user/ouramazingspace/videos
Bringing you the BESTSpace and Astronomy videos online. Showcasing videos and images from the likes of NASA,ESA,Hubble etc.
Join me on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/spaceisamazing
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Google+ : http://goo.gl/1WCBn9
Music by Keving Macleod
http://incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/

Born in New York City, Tyson became interested in astronomy at the age of nine after a visit to the Hayden Planetarium. After graduating from the Bronx High School of Science, where he was editor-in-chief of the Physical Science Journal, he completed a bachelor's degree in physics at Harvard University in 1980. After receiving a master's degree in astronomy at the University of Texas at Austin in 1983, he earned his master's (1989) and doctorate (1991) in astrophysics at Columbia University. For the next three years, he was a postdoctoral research associate at Princeton University, and in 1994, he joined the Hayden Planetarium as a staff scientist and the Princeton faculty as a visiting research scientist and lecturer. In 1996, he became director of the planetarium and oversaw its $210-million reconstruction project, which was completed in 2000.

Crash Course

Plot

Crash Course centers on a group of high schoolers in a driver’s education class; many for the second or third time. The recently divorced teacher, super-passive Larry Pearl, is on thin ice with the football fanatic principal, Principal Paulson, who is being pressured by the district superintendent to raise driver’s education completion rates or lose his coveted football program. With this in mind, Principal Paulson and his assistant, with a secret desire for his job, Abner Frasier, hire an outside driver’s education instructor with a very tough reputation, Edna Savage, aka E.W. Savage, who quickly takes control of the class.

The plot focuses mostly on the students and their interactions with their teachers and each other. In the beginning, Rico is the loner with just a few friends, Chadley is the bookish nerd with few friends who longs to be cool and also longs to be a part of Vanessa’s life who is the young, friendly and attractive girl who had to fake her mother’s signature on her driver’s education permission slip. Kichi is the hip-hop Asian kid who often raps what he has to say and constantly flirts with Maria, the rich foreign girl who thinks that the right-of-way on the roadways always goes to (insert awesomely fake foreign Latino accent) “my father’s limo”. Finally you have stereotypical football meathead J.J., who needs to pass his English exam to keep his eligibility and constantly asks out and gets rejected by Alice, the tomboy whose father owns “Santini & Son” Concrete Company. Alice is portrayed as being the “son” her father wanted.

TV series

In January 2015, the Washington Post reported that a late-night talk show called Star Talk, hosted by Tyson, will air on the National Geographic Channel starting in April 2015. On July 29, 2015, it was announced that the show was renewed for a second season.

Neil deGrasse Tyson: How to Become an Astrophysicist

How did Neil deGrasse Tyson get hooked on science? Find out when the director of the Hayden Planetarium and host of StarTalk Radio answers a fan's question on how to become an astrophysicist. Plus, Neil answers comic co-host Chuck Nice's question about how to develop a love of science and physics before it's too late! Enjoy this StarTalk Radio "Behind the Scenes" video, which was shot the same day as we recorded our episode, "Cosmic Queries: Time-Keeping."
If you'd like to listen to that day's podcast (minus this clip), click here: http://www.startalkradio.net/show/cosmic-queries-time-keeping/. If you love StarTalk Radio, don't miss out on any StarTalk news. Sign up for our free newsletter: http://www.startalkradio.net/newsletter/youtube/
Catch up with StarTalk Radio around the web:
iTunes - http://bit.ly/SOHDg6
SoundCloud - https://soundcloud.com/startalk
Stitcher - http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/startalk
Twitter - https://twitter.com/#!/StarTalkRadio
Facebook - http://www.facebook.com/StarTalkRadio
Google+ - http://goo.gl/ZP59S
Pinterest - http://pinterest.com/startalk/

3:44

How to Determine a Star's Radius : Astronomy & Astrophysics

How to Determine a Star's Radius : Astronomy & Astrophysics

How to Determine a Star's Radius : Astronomy & Astrophysics

Subscribe Now:
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Watch More:
http://www.youtube.com/ehoweducation
Determining a star's radius is something that you can't actually do directly. Find out how to determine a star's radius with help from an experienced and passionate educator in this free video clip.
Expert: Eylene Pirez
Filmmaker: bjorn wilde
SeriesDescription: Astronomy and astrophysics are very interesting and complicated topics that are more than worth exploring. Get tips on astronomy and astrophysics with help from an experienced and passionate educator in this free video series.

Professor Brian Cox Lecture on the universe

A lecture by Brian Cox on how the universe was created.
If you like this video please help me grow my channel by hitting that like button. Thanks guys! Oh & dont forget all comments are welcome so leave one, or even ask a question & answer a few

2:09

Do You Need a PhD To Be an Astrophysicist?

Do You Need a PhD To Be an Astrophysicist?

Do You Need a PhD To Be an Astrophysicist?

What is an astrophysicist? Are all astrophysicists also physicists? Can you be one without having a PhD? Find out when your own personal astrophysicist, Neil deGrasse Tyson, explains the process to Chuck Nice. In return, Chuck schools Neil on what a “Padawan” is. (The force is strong with Chuck.)
This "Behind the Scenes" video was shot during the recording of our episode, "Cosmic Queries: Super Powers." If you'd like to listen to the full podcast, click here: http://www.startalkradio.net/show/cosmic-queries-super-powers/
If you love StarTalk Radio, don't miss out on any StarTalk news. Sign up for our free newsletter: http://www.startalkradio.net/newsletter/youtube/
Catch up with StarTalk Radio around the web:
iTunes - http://bit.ly/SOHDg6
SoundCloud - https://soundcloud.com/startalk
Stitcher - http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/startalk
TuneIn - http://tunein.com/radio/StarTalk-Radio-p334521/
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Instagram - http://instagram.com/startalkradio

Neil deGrasse Tyson: Science and Faith

Don't miss new BigThink videos! Subscribe by clicking here: http://goo.gl/CPTsV5
The astrophysicist debunks the notion that scientists cannot be believers.

12:18

DAY IN THE LIFE of a CAMBRIDGE STUDENT (PHYSICS) | How to Cambridge Ep. 5

DAY IN THE LIFE of a CAMBRIDGE STUDENT (PHYSICS) | How to Cambridge Ep. 5

DAY IN THE LIFE of a CAMBRIDGE STUDENT (PHYSICS) | How to Cambridge Ep. 5

Who would have thought that studying Physics via Natural Sciences at CambridgeUniversity isn't exactly easy?
Hi guys! This week's How to Cambridge vlog is slightly different to the episodes I've put up so far, in that this week I filmed an entire day of my life rather than snippets over a few days. This is because I've been planning to film a "day in the life" style video for a long time, so you guys get a very comprehensive understanding of what it means to be a Cambridge Physicist.
I started the day off with a big bowl of porridge, and then headed to the library to do some supervision work, as well as some admin. I also checked my pigeonhole (or "pidge"), since I'd received some mail from graduate employers. It turns out, there are perks of going to Cambridge - you'll get free chocolates and playing cards because companies really want you to work for them.
After a very productive library session, I headed to the Cavendish (the Cambridge Physics department) for a lecture on Advanced QuantumCondensed Matter Physics. Let's just say, the lecturer is a legend!
Straight after this, I had a Relativistic Astrophysics and Cosmology supervision in the secondary site belonging to the Cavendish, but I had time to kill so I shot some pretty scenery for a while.
Finally, I ended the day with a Jesus College badminton session and a pizza. I think I deserved it after a long day of hard work, not having had a pizza in many months.
If you guys enjoyed this video, please give it a thumbs up and don't forget to leave me a comment telling me one thing you've been working on recently / one thing you'd like to work on in order to make yourself a better / more well rounded person!
The music in my vlogs is all original, i.e. written and recorded by myself. I record in Garageband. I film my videos on my Canon EOS M10 and iPhone 5s. I edit them in Shotcut, iMovie, and Adobe Lightroom.
Follow me on Instagram, Snapchat, and Twitter: @parthvlogs

3:12

How I spend my days as an astrophysicist | David Spergel '82

How I spend my days as an astrophysicist | David Spergel '82

How I spend my days as an astrophysicist | David Spergel '82

David Spergel '82 is a Professor of Astrophysics and Chair of the Department of Astrophysics at Princeton.
Q. How do you actually spend your days?
A. What I end up spending my day with varies from teaching, - right now I'm teaching the big Introductory Astronomy Class - so you're going in front of a lot of people and speaking; a lot of mentorship, a lot of working one-on-one with people from undergraduates to graduate students to postdocs. Now many of my former students are faculty members and I'll end up talking to them about their career…So mentoring people and working with them on projects, and developing them as scientists is a big part of what I do. At this point, also, I do a lot of things that might be really “political”. I am Chair of what's called the Space Studies Board and the National Academy of Sciences. The National Academy was set up by Abraham Lincoln to advise the federal government on science policy. In April, I was in Washington for nine days, and talked to people on the The Hill, the HouseScience Staff, the Senate Science Staff, talked to folks at OMBand OSTP at the White House. I spent a number of days at NASA headquarters talking to people there, and also served on the NASA Advisory Council. One of the other things that I do with NASA is running the Science DefinitionTeam for a big project. This is a project that’s really the successor to the Hubble Space Telescope in many ways. NASA was given a gift from the National Reconnaissance Organization of two telescopes that had not been launched, and I've been working on how we can use these telescopes to study everything from extrasolar planets to the basic properties of the universe (in terms of fielding questions on cosmology), and that work involves working with a team of really excellent people throughout the country: my co-chair at NASA and about 30 scientists at NASA and universities, and more broadly interesting, involving the whole astronomy communities: running conferences with a couple hundred people, writing reports, engaging people, building the political support and the scientific interest in the astronomy community to enable this mission. And this mission will be a two billion dollar mission, so this is a big project, and making things of this scale happen requires drawing together a consensus; bringing together a lot of people to work towards a common goal. So it's an interesting combination of scientific vision and political consensus-building skills. This is not something that was part of my physics classes. I've learned somewhat over the years about doing things like being a department chair, but in many ways I felt that Princeton prepared me for it in the other classes I took, and the other activities I was involved with outside of my core courses.
Find Mr. Spergel’s full interview here: https://careerservices.princeton.edu/node/2341
----------------------------------------­-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CAREER & LIFE VISION CONVERSATIONS is a video series by Princeton Career Services highlighting lessons learned by inspiring Princetonians. For the whole series visit: https://careerservices.princeton.edu/node/2191
----------------------------------------­-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Produced by LisaEinstein '13
Music by http://www.bensound.com/royalty-free-music
----------------------------------------­-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2:27

NASA : The Art of Astrophysics - Imagining The Unseen

NASA : The Art of Astrophysics - Imagining The Unseen

NASA : The Art of Astrophysics - Imagining The Unseen

How do you visualize distant worlds that you can't see? A team of artists uses scientific data to imagine exoplanets and other astrophysical phenomena.
The moon hanging in the night sky sent Robert Hurt’s mind into deep space -- to a region some 40 light years away, in fact, where seven Earth-sized planets crowded close to a dim, red sun.
Hurt, a visualization scientist at Caltech’s IPAC center, was walking outside his home in Mar Vista, California, shortly after he learned of the discovery of these rocky worlds around a star called TRAPPIST-1 and got the assignment to visualize them. The planets had been revealed by NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope and ground-based observatories.
“I just stopped dead in my tracks, and I just stared at it,” Hurt said in an interview. “I was imagining that could be, not our moon, but the next planet over – what it would be like to be in a system where you could look up and see continental features on the next planet.”
So began a kind of inspirational avalanche. Hurt and his colleague, multimedia producer Tim Pyle, developed a series of arresting, photorealistic images of what the new system’s tightly packed planets might look like -- so tightly packed that they would loom large in each other’s skies. Their visions of the TRAPPIST-1 system would appear in leading news outlets around the world.
Subscribe For More Videos Like This: http://www.youtube.com/user/ouramazingspace?sub_confirmation=1
See my latest videos : https://www.youtube.com/user/ouramazingspace/videos
Bringing you the BESTSpace and Astronomy videos online. Showcasing videos and images from the likes of NASA,ESA,Hubble etc.
Join me on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/spaceisamazing
Twitter: https://twitter.com/AmazingSpace2
Google+ : http://goo.gl/1WCBn9
Music by Keving Macleod
http://incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/

1:20:13

Neil deGrasse Tyson: Astrophysics for People in a Hurry.

Neil deGrasse Tyson: Astrophysics for People in a Hurry.

Neil deGrasse Tyson: Astrophysics for People in a Hurry.

Neil deGrasse Tyson presents his new book "Astrophysics for People in a Hurry"at 92Y event. In the conversation he talks about the universe, dark matter, other dimensions, basic physics and more in his traditional entertaining way.

ScienceDocumentary 2016: The MathMysteryMathematics in Nature and Universe
Astrophysicist Mario Livio, along with a colorful cast of mathematicians, physicists, and engineers, follow math from Pythagoras to Einstein and beyond,
Documentary,Documentary (TV Genre),documentaries,Documentary,History­­,HD,discovery,history,2014,1080p,docume­n­tary films,full,bbc,Space,national ...BBC Documentay, HD Documentary, Full Documentary documentary films, documentary films english subtitles, documentary films national geographic, .
Mathematical mysteries have challenged humanity's most powerful thinkers and inspired passionate, lifelong obsessions in search of answers. From the ...
Season 42, Episode 17 - “The Great Math Mystery” An exploration of mathematics, including where it comes from and why it explains the physical

9:21

Astrophysics and Cosmology: Crash Course Physics #46

Astrophysics and Cosmology: Crash Course Physics #46

Astrophysics and Cosmology: Crash Course Physics #46

It's time for the end. At least the end of our first series on Physics here at Crash Course. In this episode of Crash Course Physics, Shini sits down to talk about Astrophysics and Cosmology. By using what we've learned this year, we can come to understandings about our universe. Understandings that open ideas to us to help us grasp how our universe works. Join us for this final episode of Crash Course Physics as we head into the final frontier.
Crash Course Phsyics is produced in association with PBS Digital Studios. Click the link to check out a playlist of their newest videos!
http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL1mtdjDVOoOqJzeaJAV15Tq0tZ1vKj7ZV
***
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Learn more about this course and start your FREE trial here: https://www.TheGreatCoursesPlus.com/universe?utm_source=US_OnlineVideo&utm_medium=SocialMediaEditorialYouTube&utm_campaign=149650
ProfessorNeil deGrasse Tyson will guide you through the mysteries of the universe in this fascinating course. Everything we now know about the universe—from the behavior of quarks to the birth of entire galaxies—has stemmed from scientists who’ve been willing to ponder the unanswerable.
So what is our latest picture of some of the most inexplicable features of the universe? What still remains to be uncovered? What are some of the next avenues of exploration for today’s chemists, physicists, biologists, and astronomers?
“We know a lot about the universe. But there’s even more that we don’t know,” says astrophysicist and Professor Neil deGrasse Tyson, director of the Hayden Planetarium, an award-winning lecturer, and one of the world’s foremost experts on the secrets of the cosmos.
And Neil deGrasse Tyson’s course “The Inexplicable Universe: Unsolved Mysteries” is the perfect gateway into the mind-bending world of astrophysics.
Pondering the answers to these and other questions about astrophysics is a great way to appreciate the grandeur and complexity of the cosmos, better understand and discuss news and developments in science, and spark further interest in the universe.
This visually stunning course, which has been honored with a 2013 Telly Award for Outstanding Educational Program, features six self-contained lectures that transport you on a marvelous journey to the frontiers of the known (and unknown) universe and introduce you to tantalizing questions being addressed by the world’s top scientists.
Undeniably engaging and fascinating, this lecture series is a wonderful entrée to scientific pursuits that lie at the very heart of the history and nature of our universe.
In this Free Lecture: Scientists have made astounding progress in their grasp of the universe. But what remains to be understood? Investigate some perplexing aspects of space that science has uncovered in the last half-century. Learn about the mysterious trajectory of the Pioneer spacecraft (known as the “Pioneer anomaly”). Explore two of the longest-standing problems in astrophysics: dark matter and dark energy. And even try to map the shape of space-time.
Learn more about this course and start your FREE trial here: https://www.TheGreatCoursesPlus.com/universe?utm_source=US_OnlineVideo&utm_medium=SocialMediaEditorialYouTube&utm_campaign=149650
Check out more videos--including EXCLUSIVE interviews with Neil deGrasse Tyson--here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL2051CDC8CC6AE32E
and more here! https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLjlnbdCliaJEgqim5eTfDlciWrk5ClMoZ
And don't forget to subscribe to our channel...we are adding new videos all the time! https://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=TheGreatCourses

Originally posted here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=atiR8QgGU6Q&feature=mfu_in_order&list=UL
Questions which attack the very foundations of the myths which make up so-called academic knowledge regarding astrophysics. It is easily provable that the gravitational theories which have enslaved mankind to a false corporate owned psyence are seriously fraudulent. The reason being that they benefit a few very wealthy families known as the: energy barons, war mongers and central bankers.
We live in an Electric Universe and all phenomena observed in our Universe are easily explained as being created electrically.
The Electric Universe Paradigm means humanity is no longer enslaved to false theories like the so-called second law of thermodynamics. Poorly thoughout archaic "laws" created by the mythematicians like einstein, newton, hawking, susskind and the rest of their ilk.
Free Energy and FreeThinking
http://www.feandft.com/

4:33

4 Tips for people interested in astronomy and astrophysics

4 Tips for people interested in astronomy and astrophysics

4 Tips for people interested in astronomy and astrophysics

This video is aimed at high school and undergrad students who wish to pursue astronomy or astrophysics as a career later on. Feel free to ask questions or add your tips/suggestions.

2:40

13 year old Invents Free Energy Device for 14 bucks!

13 year old Invents Free Energy Device for 14 bucks!

13 year old Invents Free Energy Device for 14 bucks!

A new generation of smart youth are now producing the very free energy technologies I have been promoting and the consciousness that goes with it for the past 15 years!
Free Energy and FreeThinking:
htttp:www.feandft.com

Neil deGrasse Tyson: How to Become an Astrophysicist

How did Neil deGrasse Tyson get hooked on science? Find out when the director of the Hayden Planetarium and host of StarTalk Radio answers a fan's question on how to become an astrophysicist. Plus, Neil answers comic co-host Chuck Nice's question about how to develop a love of science and physics before it's too late! Enjoy this StarTalk Radio "Behind the Scenes" video, which was shot the same day as we recorded our episode, "Cosmic Queries: Time-Keeping."
If you'd like to listen to that day's podcast (minus this clip), click here: http://www.startalkradio.net/show/cosmic-queries-time-keeping/. If you love StarTalk Radio, don't miss out on any StarTalk news. Sign up for our free newsletter: http://www.startalkradio.net/newsletter/youtube/
Catch up with StarTalk Radio around the web:
iTu...

published: 28 Mar 2013

How to Determine a Star's Radius : Astronomy & Astrophysics

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Watch More:
http://www.youtube.com/ehoweducation
Determining a star's radius is something that you can't actually do directly. Find out how to determine a star's radius with help from an experienced and passionate educator in this free video clip.
Expert: Eylene Pirez
Filmmaker: bjorn wilde
SeriesDescription: Astronomy and astrophysics are very interesting and complicated topics that are more than worth exploring. Get tips on astronomy and astrophysics with help from an experienced and passionate educator in this free video series.

Professor Brian Cox Lecture on the universe

A lecture by Brian Cox on how the universe was created.
If you like this video please help me grow my channel by hitting that like button. Thanks guys! Oh & dont forget all comments are welcome so leave one, or even ask a question & answer a few

published: 24 Feb 2013

Do You Need a PhD To Be an Astrophysicist?

What is an astrophysicist? Are all astrophysicists also physicists? Can you be one without having a PhD? Find out when your own personal astrophysicist, Neil deGrasse Tyson, explains the process to Chuck Nice. In return, Chuck schools Neil on what a “Padawan” is. (The force is strong with Chuck.)
This "Behind the Scenes" video was shot during the recording of our episode, "Cosmic Queries: Super Powers." If you'd like to listen to the full podcast, click here: http://www.startalkradio.net/show/cosmic-queries-super-powers/
If you love StarTalk Radio, don't miss out on any StarTalk news. Sign up for our free newsletter: http://www.startalkradio.net/newsletter/youtube/
Catch up with StarTalk Radio around the web:
iTunes - http://bit.ly/SOHDg6
SoundCloud - https://soundcloud.com/startalk
Sti...

What is God? According to 13 year old genius physicist - Max Loughan

Neil deGrasse Tyson: Science and Faith

Don't miss new BigThink videos! Subscribe by clicking here: http://goo.gl/CPTsV5
The astrophysicist debunks the notion that scientists cannot be believers.

published: 03 Jun 2011

DAY IN THE LIFE of a CAMBRIDGE STUDENT (PHYSICS) | How to Cambridge Ep. 5

Who would have thought that studying Physics via Natural Sciences at CambridgeUniversity isn't exactly easy?
Hi guys! This week's How to Cambridge vlog is slightly different to the episodes I've put up so far, in that this week I filmed an entire day of my life rather than snippets over a few days. This is because I've been planning to film a "day in the life" style video for a long time, so you guys get a very comprehensive understanding of what it means to be a Cambridge Physicist.
I started the day off with a big bowl of porridge, and then headed to the library to do some supervision work, as well as some admin. I also checked my pigeonhole (or "pidge"), since I'd received some mail from graduate employers. It turns out, there are perks of going to Cambridge - you'll get free chocola...

published: 23 Oct 2017

How I spend my days as an astrophysicist | David Spergel '82

David Spergel '82 is a Professor of Astrophysics and Chair of the Department of Astrophysics at Princeton.
Q. How do you actually spend your days?
A. What I end up spending my day with varies from teaching, - right now I'm teaching the big Introductory Astronomy Class - so you're going in front of a lot of people and speaking; a lot of mentorship, a lot of working one-on-one with people from undergraduates to graduate students to postdocs. Now many of my former students are faculty members and I'll end up talking to them about their career…So mentoring people and working with them on projects, and developing them as scientists is a big part of what I do. At this point, also, I do a lot of things that might be really “political”. I am Chair of what's called the Space Studies Board and the...

published: 30 Jun 2016

NASA : The Art of Astrophysics - Imagining The Unseen

How do you visualize distant worlds that you can't see? A team of artists uses scientific data to imagine exoplanets and other astrophysical phenomena.
The moon hanging in the night sky sent Robert Hurt’s mind into deep space -- to a region some 40 light years away, in fact, where seven Earth-sized planets crowded close to a dim, red sun.
Hurt, a visualization scientist at Caltech’s IPAC center, was walking outside his home in Mar Vista, California, shortly after he learned of the discovery of these rocky worlds around a star called TRAPPIST-1 and got the assignment to visualize them. The planets had been revealed by NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope and ground-based observatories.
“I just stopped dead in my tracks, and I just stared at it,” Hurt said in an interview. “I was imagining tha...

published: 10 Jun 2017

Neil deGrasse Tyson: Astrophysics for People in a Hurry.

Neil deGrasse Tyson presents his new book "Astrophysics for People in a Hurry"at 92Y event. In the conversation he talks about the universe, dark matter, other dimensions, basic physics and more in his traditional entertaining way.

ScienceDocumentary 2016: The MathMysteryMathematics in Nature and Universe
Astrophysicist Mario Livio, along with a colorful cast of mathematicians, physicists, and engineers, follow math from Pythagoras to Einstein and beyond,
Documentary,Documentary (TV Genre),documentaries,Documentary,History­­,HD,discovery,history,2014,1080p,docume­n­tary films,full,bbc,Space,national ...BBC Documentay, HD Documentary, Full Documentary documentary films, documentary films english subtitles, documentary films national geographic, .
Mathematical mysteries have challenged humanity's most powerful thinkers and inspired passionate, lifelong obsessions in search of answers. From the ...
Season 42, Episode 17 - “The Great Math Mystery” An exploration of mathematics, including where it comes from and ...

published: 08 Jan 2016

Astrophysics and Cosmology: Crash Course Physics #46

It's time for the end. At least the end of our first series on Physics here at Crash Course. In this episode of Crash Course Physics, Shini sits down to talk about Astrophysics and Cosmology. By using what we've learned this year, we can come to understandings about our universe. Understandings that open ideas to us to help us grasp how our universe works. Join us for this final episode of Crash Course Physics as we head into the final frontier.
Crash Course Phsyics is produced in association with PBS Digital Studios. Click the link to check out a playlist of their newest videos!
http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL1mtdjDVOoOqJzeaJAV15Tq0tZ1vKj7ZV
***
Want to find Crash Course elsewhere on the internet?
Facebook - http://www.facebook.com/YouTubeCrashCourse
Twitter - http://www.twi...

Learn more about this course and start your FREE trial here: https://www.TheGreatCoursesPlus.com/universe?utm_source=US_OnlineVideo&utm_medium=SocialMediaEditorialYouTube&utm_campaign=149650
ProfessorNeil deGrasse Tyson will guide you through the mysteries of the universe in this fascinating course. Everything we now know about the universe—from the behavior of quarks to the birth of entire galaxies—has stemmed from scientists who’ve been willing to ponder the unanswerable.
So what is our latest picture of some of the most inexplicable features of the universe? What still remains to be uncovered? What are some of the next avenues of exploration for today’s chemists, physicists, biologists, and astronomers?
“We know a lot about the universe. But there’s even more that we don’t know,” ...

Originally posted here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=atiR8QgGU6Q&feature=mfu_in_order&list=UL
Questions which attack the very foundations of the myths which make up so-called academic knowledge regarding astrophysics. It is easily provable that the gravitational theories which have enslaved mankind to a false corporate owned psyence are seriously fraudulent. The reason being that they benefit a few very wealthy families known as the: energy barons, war mongers and central bankers.
We live in an Electric Universe and all phenomena observed in our Universe are easily explained as being created electrically.
The Electric Universe Paradigm means humanity is no longer enslaved to false theories like the so-called second law of thermodynamics. Poorly thoughout archaic "laws" created...

published: 17 Apr 2011

4 Tips for people interested in astronomy and astrophysics

This video is aimed at high school and undergrad students who wish to pursue astronomy or astrophysics as a career later on. Feel free to ask questions or add your tips/suggestions.

published: 16 Jul 2016

13 year old Invents Free Energy Device for 14 bucks!

A new generation of smart youth are now producing the very free energy technologies I have been promoting and the consciousness that goes with it for the past 15 years!
Free Energy and FreeThinking:
htttp:www.feandft.com

How did Neil deGrasse Tyson get hooked on science? Find out when the director of the Hayden Planetarium and host of StarTalk Radio answers a fan's question on how to become an astrophysicist. Plus, Neil answers comic co-host Chuck Nice's question about how to develop a love of science and physics before it's too late! Enjoy this StarTalk Radio "Behind the Scenes" video, which was shot the same day as we recorded our episode, "Cosmic Queries: Time-Keeping."
If you'd like to listen to that day's podcast (minus this clip), click here: http://www.startalkradio.net/show/cosmic-queries-time-keeping/. If you love StarTalk Radio, don't miss out on any StarTalk news. Sign up for our free newsletter: http://www.startalkradio.net/newsletter/youtube/
Catch up with StarTalk Radio around the web:
iTunes - http://bit.ly/SOHDg6
SoundCloud - https://soundcloud.com/startalk
Stitcher - http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/startalk
Twitter - https://twitter.com/#!/StarTalkRadio
Facebook - http://www.facebook.com/StarTalkRadio
Google+ - http://goo.gl/ZP59S
Pinterest - http://pinterest.com/startalk/

How did Neil deGrasse Tyson get hooked on science? Find out when the director of the Hayden Planetarium and host of StarTalk Radio answers a fan's question on how to become an astrophysicist. Plus, Neil answers comic co-host Chuck Nice's question about how to develop a love of science and physics before it's too late! Enjoy this StarTalk Radio "Behind the Scenes" video, which was shot the same day as we recorded our episode, "Cosmic Queries: Time-Keeping."
If you'd like to listen to that day's podcast (minus this clip), click here: http://www.startalkradio.net/show/cosmic-queries-time-keeping/. If you love StarTalk Radio, don't miss out on any StarTalk news. Sign up for our free newsletter: http://www.startalkradio.net/newsletter/youtube/
Catch up with StarTalk Radio around the web:
iTunes - http://bit.ly/SOHDg6
SoundCloud - https://soundcloud.com/startalk
Stitcher - http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/startalk
Twitter - https://twitter.com/#!/StarTalkRadio
Facebook - http://www.facebook.com/StarTalkRadio
Google+ - http://goo.gl/ZP59S
Pinterest - http://pinterest.com/startalk/

Subscribe Now:
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Watch More:
http://www.youtube.com/ehoweducation
Determining a star's radius is something that you can't actually do directly. Find out how to determine a star's radius with help from an experienced and passionate educator in this free video clip.
Expert: Eylene Pirez
Filmmaker: bjorn wilde
SeriesDescription: Astronomy and astrophysics are very interesting and complicated topics that are more than worth exploring. Get tips on astronomy and astrophysics with help from an experienced and passionate educator in this free video series.

Subscribe Now:
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Watch More:
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Determining a star's radius is something that you can't actually do directly. Find out how to determine a star's radius with help from an experienced and passionate educator in this free video clip.
Expert: Eylene Pirez
Filmmaker: bjorn wilde
SeriesDescription: Astronomy and astrophysics are very interesting and complicated topics that are more than worth exploring. Get tips on astronomy and astrophysics with help from an experienced and passionate educator in this free video series.

Professor Brian Cox Lecture on the universe

A lecture by Brian Cox on how the universe was created.
If you like this video please help me grow my channel by hitting that like button. Thanks guys! Oh & don...

A lecture by Brian Cox on how the universe was created.
If you like this video please help me grow my channel by hitting that like button. Thanks guys! Oh & dont forget all comments are welcome so leave one, or even ask a question & answer a few

A lecture by Brian Cox on how the universe was created.
If you like this video please help me grow my channel by hitting that like button. Thanks guys! Oh & dont forget all comments are welcome so leave one, or even ask a question & answer a few

Do You Need a PhD To Be an Astrophysicist?

What is an astrophysicist? Are all astrophysicists also physicists? Can you be one without having a PhD? Find out when your own personal astrophysicist, Neil de...

What is an astrophysicist? Are all astrophysicists also physicists? Can you be one without having a PhD? Find out when your own personal astrophysicist, Neil deGrasse Tyson, explains the process to Chuck Nice. In return, Chuck schools Neil on what a “Padawan” is. (The force is strong with Chuck.)
This "Behind the Scenes" video was shot during the recording of our episode, "Cosmic Queries: Super Powers." If you'd like to listen to the full podcast, click here: http://www.startalkradio.net/show/cosmic-queries-super-powers/
If you love StarTalk Radio, don't miss out on any StarTalk news. Sign up for our free newsletter: http://www.startalkradio.net/newsletter/youtube/
Catch up with StarTalk Radio around the web:
iTunes - http://bit.ly/SOHDg6
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Stitcher - http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/startalk
TuneIn - http://tunein.com/radio/StarTalk-Radio-p334521/
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What is an astrophysicist? Are all astrophysicists also physicists? Can you be one without having a PhD? Find out when your own personal astrophysicist, Neil deGrasse Tyson, explains the process to Chuck Nice. In return, Chuck schools Neil on what a “Padawan” is. (The force is strong with Chuck.)
This "Behind the Scenes" video was shot during the recording of our episode, "Cosmic Queries: Super Powers." If you'd like to listen to the full podcast, click here: http://www.startalkradio.net/show/cosmic-queries-super-powers/
If you love StarTalk Radio, don't miss out on any StarTalk news. Sign up for our free newsletter: http://www.startalkradio.net/newsletter/youtube/
Catch up with StarTalk Radio around the web:
iTunes - http://bit.ly/SOHDg6
SoundCloud - https://soundcloud.com/startalk
Stitcher - http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/startalk
TuneIn - http://tunein.com/radio/StarTalk-Radio-p334521/
Twitter - https://twitter.com/StarTalkRadio
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Instagram - http://instagram.com/startalkradio

Who would have thought that studying Physics via Natural Sciences at CambridgeUniversity isn't exactly easy?
Hi guys! This week's How to Cambridge vlog is slightly different to the episodes I've put up so far, in that this week I filmed an entire day of my life rather than snippets over a few days. This is because I've been planning to film a "day in the life" style video for a long time, so you guys get a very comprehensive understanding of what it means to be a Cambridge Physicist.
I started the day off with a big bowl of porridge, and then headed to the library to do some supervision work, as well as some admin. I also checked my pigeonhole (or "pidge"), since I'd received some mail from graduate employers. It turns out, there are perks of going to Cambridge - you'll get free chocolates and playing cards because companies really want you to work for them.
After a very productive library session, I headed to the Cavendish (the Cambridge Physics department) for a lecture on Advanced QuantumCondensed Matter Physics. Let's just say, the lecturer is a legend!
Straight after this, I had a Relativistic Astrophysics and Cosmology supervision in the secondary site belonging to the Cavendish, but I had time to kill so I shot some pretty scenery for a while.
Finally, I ended the day with a Jesus College badminton session and a pizza. I think I deserved it after a long day of hard work, not having had a pizza in many months.
If you guys enjoyed this video, please give it a thumbs up and don't forget to leave me a comment telling me one thing you've been working on recently / one thing you'd like to work on in order to make yourself a better / more well rounded person!
The music in my vlogs is all original, i.e. written and recorded by myself. I record in Garageband. I film my videos on my Canon EOS M10 and iPhone 5s. I edit them in Shotcut, iMovie, and Adobe Lightroom.
Follow me on Instagram, Snapchat, and Twitter: @parthvlogs

Who would have thought that studying Physics via Natural Sciences at CambridgeUniversity isn't exactly easy?
Hi guys! This week's How to Cambridge vlog is slightly different to the episodes I've put up so far, in that this week I filmed an entire day of my life rather than snippets over a few days. This is because I've been planning to film a "day in the life" style video for a long time, so you guys get a very comprehensive understanding of what it means to be a Cambridge Physicist.
I started the day off with a big bowl of porridge, and then headed to the library to do some supervision work, as well as some admin. I also checked my pigeonhole (or "pidge"), since I'd received some mail from graduate employers. It turns out, there are perks of going to Cambridge - you'll get free chocolates and playing cards because companies really want you to work for them.
After a very productive library session, I headed to the Cavendish (the Cambridge Physics department) for a lecture on Advanced QuantumCondensed Matter Physics. Let's just say, the lecturer is a legend!
Straight after this, I had a Relativistic Astrophysics and Cosmology supervision in the secondary site belonging to the Cavendish, but I had time to kill so I shot some pretty scenery for a while.
Finally, I ended the day with a Jesus College badminton session and a pizza. I think I deserved it after a long day of hard work, not having had a pizza in many months.
If you guys enjoyed this video, please give it a thumbs up and don't forget to leave me a comment telling me one thing you've been working on recently / one thing you'd like to work on in order to make yourself a better / more well rounded person!
The music in my vlogs is all original, i.e. written and recorded by myself. I record in Garageband. I film my videos on my Canon EOS M10 and iPhone 5s. I edit them in Shotcut, iMovie, and Adobe Lightroom.
Follow me on Instagram, Snapchat, and Twitter: @parthvlogs

David Spergel '82 is a Professor of Astrophysics and Chair of the Department of Astrophysics at Princeton.
Q. How do you actually spend your days?
A. What I end up spending my day with varies from teaching, - right now I'm teaching the big Introductory Astronomy Class - so you're going in front of a lot of people and speaking; a lot of mentorship, a lot of working one-on-one with people from undergraduates to graduate students to postdocs. Now many of my former students are faculty members and I'll end up talking to them about their career…So mentoring people and working with them on projects, and developing them as scientists is a big part of what I do. At this point, also, I do a lot of things that might be really “political”. I am Chair of what's called the Space Studies Board and the National Academy of Sciences. The National Academy was set up by Abraham Lincoln to advise the federal government on science policy. In April, I was in Washington for nine days, and talked to people on the The Hill, the HouseScience Staff, the Senate Science Staff, talked to folks at OMBand OSTP at the White House. I spent a number of days at NASA headquarters talking to people there, and also served on the NASA Advisory Council. One of the other things that I do with NASA is running the Science DefinitionTeam for a big project. This is a project that’s really the successor to the Hubble Space Telescope in many ways. NASA was given a gift from the National Reconnaissance Organization of two telescopes that had not been launched, and I've been working on how we can use these telescopes to study everything from extrasolar planets to the basic properties of the universe (in terms of fielding questions on cosmology), and that work involves working with a team of really excellent people throughout the country: my co-chair at NASA and about 30 scientists at NASA and universities, and more broadly interesting, involving the whole astronomy communities: running conferences with a couple hundred people, writing reports, engaging people, building the political support and the scientific interest in the astronomy community to enable this mission. And this mission will be a two billion dollar mission, so this is a big project, and making things of this scale happen requires drawing together a consensus; bringing together a lot of people to work towards a common goal. So it's an interesting combination of scientific vision and political consensus-building skills. This is not something that was part of my physics classes. I've learned somewhat over the years about doing things like being a department chair, but in many ways I felt that Princeton prepared me for it in the other classes I took, and the other activities I was involved with outside of my core courses.
Find Mr. Spergel’s full interview here: https://careerservices.princeton.edu/node/2341
----------------------------------------­-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CAREER & LIFE VISION CONVERSATIONS is a video series by Princeton Career Services highlighting lessons learned by inspiring Princetonians. For the whole series visit: https://careerservices.princeton.edu/node/2191
----------------------------------------­-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Produced by LisaEinstein '13
Music by http://www.bensound.com/royalty-free-music
----------------------------------------­-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

David Spergel '82 is a Professor of Astrophysics and Chair of the Department of Astrophysics at Princeton.
Q. How do you actually spend your days?
A. What I end up spending my day with varies from teaching, - right now I'm teaching the big Introductory Astronomy Class - so you're going in front of a lot of people and speaking; a lot of mentorship, a lot of working one-on-one with people from undergraduates to graduate students to postdocs. Now many of my former students are faculty members and I'll end up talking to them about their career…So mentoring people and working with them on projects, and developing them as scientists is a big part of what I do. At this point, also, I do a lot of things that might be really “political”. I am Chair of what's called the Space Studies Board and the National Academy of Sciences. The National Academy was set up by Abraham Lincoln to advise the federal government on science policy. In April, I was in Washington for nine days, and talked to people on the The Hill, the HouseScience Staff, the Senate Science Staff, talked to folks at OMBand OSTP at the White House. I spent a number of days at NASA headquarters talking to people there, and also served on the NASA Advisory Council. One of the other things that I do with NASA is running the Science DefinitionTeam for a big project. This is a project that’s really the successor to the Hubble Space Telescope in many ways. NASA was given a gift from the National Reconnaissance Organization of two telescopes that had not been launched, and I've been working on how we can use these telescopes to study everything from extrasolar planets to the basic properties of the universe (in terms of fielding questions on cosmology), and that work involves working with a team of really excellent people throughout the country: my co-chair at NASA and about 30 scientists at NASA and universities, and more broadly interesting, involving the whole astronomy communities: running conferences with a couple hundred people, writing reports, engaging people, building the political support and the scientific interest in the astronomy community to enable this mission. And this mission will be a two billion dollar mission, so this is a big project, and making things of this scale happen requires drawing together a consensus; bringing together a lot of people to work towards a common goal. So it's an interesting combination of scientific vision and political consensus-building skills. This is not something that was part of my physics classes. I've learned somewhat over the years about doing things like being a department chair, but in many ways I felt that Princeton prepared me for it in the other classes I took, and the other activities I was involved with outside of my core courses.
Find Mr. Spergel’s full interview here: https://careerservices.princeton.edu/node/2341
----------------------------------------­-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CAREER & LIFE VISION CONVERSATIONS is a video series by Princeton Career Services highlighting lessons learned by inspiring Princetonians. For the whole series visit: https://careerservices.princeton.edu/node/2191
----------------------------------------­-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Produced by LisaEinstein '13
Music by http://www.bensound.com/royalty-free-music
----------------------------------------­-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

NASA : The Art of Astrophysics - Imagining The Unseen

How do you visualize distant worlds that you can't see? A team of artists uses scientific data to imagine exoplanets and other astrophysical phenomena.
The mo...

How do you visualize distant worlds that you can't see? A team of artists uses scientific data to imagine exoplanets and other astrophysical phenomena.
The moon hanging in the night sky sent Robert Hurt’s mind into deep space -- to a region some 40 light years away, in fact, where seven Earth-sized planets crowded close to a dim, red sun.
Hurt, a visualization scientist at Caltech’s IPAC center, was walking outside his home in Mar Vista, California, shortly after he learned of the discovery of these rocky worlds around a star called TRAPPIST-1 and got the assignment to visualize them. The planets had been revealed by NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope and ground-based observatories.
“I just stopped dead in my tracks, and I just stared at it,” Hurt said in an interview. “I was imagining that could be, not our moon, but the next planet over – what it would be like to be in a system where you could look up and see continental features on the next planet.”
So began a kind of inspirational avalanche. Hurt and his colleague, multimedia producer Tim Pyle, developed a series of arresting, photorealistic images of what the new system’s tightly packed planets might look like -- so tightly packed that they would loom large in each other’s skies. Their visions of the TRAPPIST-1 system would appear in leading news outlets around the world.
Subscribe For More Videos Like This: http://www.youtube.com/user/ouramazingspace?sub_confirmation=1
See my latest videos : https://www.youtube.com/user/ouramazingspace/videos
Bringing you the BESTSpace and Astronomy videos online. Showcasing videos and images from the likes of NASA,ESA,Hubble etc.
Join me on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/spaceisamazing
Twitter: https://twitter.com/AmazingSpace2
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Music by Keving Macleod
http://incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/

How do you visualize distant worlds that you can't see? A team of artists uses scientific data to imagine exoplanets and other astrophysical phenomena.
The moon hanging in the night sky sent Robert Hurt’s mind into deep space -- to a region some 40 light years away, in fact, where seven Earth-sized planets crowded close to a dim, red sun.
Hurt, a visualization scientist at Caltech’s IPAC center, was walking outside his home in Mar Vista, California, shortly after he learned of the discovery of these rocky worlds around a star called TRAPPIST-1 and got the assignment to visualize them. The planets had been revealed by NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope and ground-based observatories.
“I just stopped dead in my tracks, and I just stared at it,” Hurt said in an interview. “I was imagining that could be, not our moon, but the next planet over – what it would be like to be in a system where you could look up and see continental features on the next planet.”
So began a kind of inspirational avalanche. Hurt and his colleague, multimedia producer Tim Pyle, developed a series of arresting, photorealistic images of what the new system’s tightly packed planets might look like -- so tightly packed that they would loom large in each other’s skies. Their visions of the TRAPPIST-1 system would appear in leading news outlets around the world.
Subscribe For More Videos Like This: http://www.youtube.com/user/ouramazingspace?sub_confirmation=1
See my latest videos : https://www.youtube.com/user/ouramazingspace/videos
Bringing you the BESTSpace and Astronomy videos online. Showcasing videos and images from the likes of NASA,ESA,Hubble etc.
Join me on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/spaceisamazing
Twitter: https://twitter.com/AmazingSpace2
Google+ : http://goo.gl/1WCBn9
Music by Keving Macleod
http://incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/

Neil deGrasse Tyson presents his new book "Astrophysics for People in a Hurry"at 92Y event. In the conversation he talks about the universe, dark matter, other dimensions, basic physics and more in his traditional entertaining way.

Neil deGrasse Tyson presents his new book "Astrophysics for People in a Hurry"at 92Y event. In the conversation he talks about the universe, dark matter, other dimensions, basic physics and more in his traditional entertaining way.

ScienceDocumentary 2016: The MathMysteryMathematics in Nature and Universe
Astrophysicist Mario Livio, along with a colorful cast of mathematicians, physicists, and engineers, follow math from Pythagoras to Einstein and beyond,
Documentary,Documentary (TV Genre),documentaries,Documentary,History­­,HD,discovery,history,2014,1080p,docume­n­tary films,full,bbc,Space,national ...BBC Documentay, HD Documentary, Full Documentary documentary films, documentary films english subtitles, documentary films national geographic, .
Mathematical mysteries have challenged humanity's most powerful thinkers and inspired passionate, lifelong obsessions in search of answers. From the ...
Season 42, Episode 17 - “The Great Math Mystery” An exploration of mathematics, including where it comes from and why it explains the physical

ScienceDocumentary 2016: The MathMysteryMathematics in Nature and Universe
Astrophysicist Mario Livio, along with a colorful cast of mathematicians, physicists, and engineers, follow math from Pythagoras to Einstein and beyond,
Documentary,Documentary (TV Genre),documentaries,Documentary,History­­,HD,discovery,history,2014,1080p,docume­n­tary films,full,bbc,Space,national ...BBC Documentay, HD Documentary, Full Documentary documentary films, documentary films english subtitles, documentary films national geographic, .
Mathematical mysteries have challenged humanity's most powerful thinkers and inspired passionate, lifelong obsessions in search of answers. From the ...
Season 42, Episode 17 - “The Great Math Mystery” An exploration of mathematics, including where it comes from and why it explains the physical

Astrophysics and Cosmology: Crash Course Physics #46

It's time for the end. At least the end of our first series on Physics here at Crash Course. In this episode of Crash Course Physics, Shini sits down to talk ab...

It's time for the end. At least the end of our first series on Physics here at Crash Course. In this episode of Crash Course Physics, Shini sits down to talk about Astrophysics and Cosmology. By using what we've learned this year, we can come to understandings about our universe. Understandings that open ideas to us to help us grasp how our universe works. Join us for this final episode of Crash Course Physics as we head into the final frontier.
Crash Course Phsyics is produced in association with PBS Digital Studios. Click the link to check out a playlist of their newest videos!
http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL1mtdjDVOoOqJzeaJAV15Tq0tZ1vKj7ZV
***
Want to find Crash Course elsewhere on the internet?
Facebook - http://www.facebook.com/YouTubeCrashCourse
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It's time for the end. At least the end of our first series on Physics here at Crash Course. In this episode of Crash Course Physics, Shini sits down to talk about Astrophysics and Cosmology. By using what we've learned this year, we can come to understandings about our universe. Understandings that open ideas to us to help us grasp how our universe works. Join us for this final episode of Crash Course Physics as we head into the final frontier.
Crash Course Phsyics is produced in association with PBS Digital Studios. Click the link to check out a playlist of their newest videos!
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Learn more about this course and start your FREE trial here: https://www.TheGreatCoursesPlus.com/universe?utm_source=US_OnlineVideo&utm_medium=SocialMediaEditor...

Learn more about this course and start your FREE trial here: https://www.TheGreatCoursesPlus.com/universe?utm_source=US_OnlineVideo&utm_medium=SocialMediaEditorialYouTube&utm_campaign=149650
ProfessorNeil deGrasse Tyson will guide you through the mysteries of the universe in this fascinating course. Everything we now know about the universe—from the behavior of quarks to the birth of entire galaxies—has stemmed from scientists who’ve been willing to ponder the unanswerable.
So what is our latest picture of some of the most inexplicable features of the universe? What still remains to be uncovered? What are some of the next avenues of exploration for today’s chemists, physicists, biologists, and astronomers?
“We know a lot about the universe. But there’s even more that we don’t know,” says astrophysicist and Professor Neil deGrasse Tyson, director of the Hayden Planetarium, an award-winning lecturer, and one of the world’s foremost experts on the secrets of the cosmos.
And Neil deGrasse Tyson’s course “The Inexplicable Universe: Unsolved Mysteries” is the perfect gateway into the mind-bending world of astrophysics.
Pondering the answers to these and other questions about astrophysics is a great way to appreciate the grandeur and complexity of the cosmos, better understand and discuss news and developments in science, and spark further interest in the universe.
This visually stunning course, which has been honored with a 2013 Telly Award for Outstanding Educational Program, features six self-contained lectures that transport you on a marvelous journey to the frontiers of the known (and unknown) universe and introduce you to tantalizing questions being addressed by the world’s top scientists.
Undeniably engaging and fascinating, this lecture series is a wonderful entrée to scientific pursuits that lie at the very heart of the history and nature of our universe.
In this Free Lecture: Scientists have made astounding progress in their grasp of the universe. But what remains to be understood? Investigate some perplexing aspects of space that science has uncovered in the last half-century. Learn about the mysterious trajectory of the Pioneer spacecraft (known as the “Pioneer anomaly”). Explore two of the longest-standing problems in astrophysics: dark matter and dark energy. And even try to map the shape of space-time.
Learn more about this course and start your FREE trial here: https://www.TheGreatCoursesPlus.com/universe?utm_source=US_OnlineVideo&utm_medium=SocialMediaEditorialYouTube&utm_campaign=149650
Check out more videos--including EXCLUSIVE interviews with Neil deGrasse Tyson--here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL2051CDC8CC6AE32E
and more here! https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLjlnbdCliaJEgqim5eTfDlciWrk5ClMoZ
And don't forget to subscribe to our channel...we are adding new videos all the time! https://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=TheGreatCourses

Learn more about this course and start your FREE trial here: https://www.TheGreatCoursesPlus.com/universe?utm_source=US_OnlineVideo&utm_medium=SocialMediaEditorialYouTube&utm_campaign=149650
ProfessorNeil deGrasse Tyson will guide you through the mysteries of the universe in this fascinating course. Everything we now know about the universe—from the behavior of quarks to the birth of entire galaxies—has stemmed from scientists who’ve been willing to ponder the unanswerable.
So what is our latest picture of some of the most inexplicable features of the universe? What still remains to be uncovered? What are some of the next avenues of exploration for today’s chemists, physicists, biologists, and astronomers?
“We know a lot about the universe. But there’s even more that we don’t know,” says astrophysicist and Professor Neil deGrasse Tyson, director of the Hayden Planetarium, an award-winning lecturer, and one of the world’s foremost experts on the secrets of the cosmos.
And Neil deGrasse Tyson’s course “The Inexplicable Universe: Unsolved Mysteries” is the perfect gateway into the mind-bending world of astrophysics.
Pondering the answers to these and other questions about astrophysics is a great way to appreciate the grandeur and complexity of the cosmos, better understand and discuss news and developments in science, and spark further interest in the universe.
This visually stunning course, which has been honored with a 2013 Telly Award for Outstanding Educational Program, features six self-contained lectures that transport you on a marvelous journey to the frontiers of the known (and unknown) universe and introduce you to tantalizing questions being addressed by the world’s top scientists.
Undeniably engaging and fascinating, this lecture series is a wonderful entrée to scientific pursuits that lie at the very heart of the history and nature of our universe.
In this Free Lecture: Scientists have made astounding progress in their grasp of the universe. But what remains to be understood? Investigate some perplexing aspects of space that science has uncovered in the last half-century. Learn about the mysterious trajectory of the Pioneer spacecraft (known as the “Pioneer anomaly”). Explore two of the longest-standing problems in astrophysics: dark matter and dark energy. And even try to map the shape of space-time.
Learn more about this course and start your FREE trial here: https://www.TheGreatCoursesPlus.com/universe?utm_source=US_OnlineVideo&utm_medium=SocialMediaEditorialYouTube&utm_campaign=149650
Check out more videos--including EXCLUSIVE interviews with Neil deGrasse Tyson--here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL2051CDC8CC6AE32E
and more here! https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLjlnbdCliaJEgqim5eTfDlciWrk5ClMoZ
And don't forget to subscribe to our channel...we are adding new videos all the time! https://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=TheGreatCourses

Originally posted here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=atiR8QgGU6Q&feature=mfu_in_order&list=UL
Questions which attack the very foundations of the myths whic...

Originally posted here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=atiR8QgGU6Q&feature=mfu_in_order&list=UL
Questions which attack the very foundations of the myths which make up so-called academic knowledge regarding astrophysics. It is easily provable that the gravitational theories which have enslaved mankind to a false corporate owned psyence are seriously fraudulent. The reason being that they benefit a few very wealthy families known as the: energy barons, war mongers and central bankers.
We live in an Electric Universe and all phenomena observed in our Universe are easily explained as being created electrically.
The Electric Universe Paradigm means humanity is no longer enslaved to false theories like the so-called second law of thermodynamics. Poorly thoughout archaic "laws" created by the mythematicians like einstein, newton, hawking, susskind and the rest of their ilk.
Free Energy and FreeThinking
http://www.feandft.com/

Originally posted here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=atiR8QgGU6Q&feature=mfu_in_order&list=UL
Questions which attack the very foundations of the myths which make up so-called academic knowledge regarding astrophysics. It is easily provable that the gravitational theories which have enslaved mankind to a false corporate owned psyence are seriously fraudulent. The reason being that they benefit a few very wealthy families known as the: energy barons, war mongers and central bankers.
We live in an Electric Universe and all phenomena observed in our Universe are easily explained as being created electrically.
The Electric Universe Paradigm means humanity is no longer enslaved to false theories like the so-called second law of thermodynamics. Poorly thoughout archaic "laws" created by the mythematicians like einstein, newton, hawking, susskind and the rest of their ilk.
Free Energy and FreeThinking
http://www.feandft.com/

13 year old Invents Free Energy Device for 14 bucks!

A new generation of smart youth are now producing the very free energy technologies I have been promoting and the consciousness that goes with it for the past ...

A new generation of smart youth are now producing the very free energy technologies I have been promoting and the consciousness that goes with it for the past 15 years!
Free Energy and FreeThinking:
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A new generation of smart youth are now producing the very free energy technologies I have been promoting and the consciousness that goes with it for the past 15 years!
Free Energy and FreeThinking:
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Neil deGrasse Tyson: Astrophysics for People in a Hurry.

Neil deGrasse Tyson presents his new book "Astrophysics for People in a Hurry"at 92Y event. In the conversation he talks about the universe, dark matter, other dimensions, basic physics and more in his traditional entertaining way.

published: 05 May 2017

Professor Brian Cox Lecture on the universe

A lecture by Brian Cox on how the universe was created.
If you like this video please help me grow my channel by hitting that like button. Thanks guys! Oh & dont forget all comments are welcome so leave one, or even ask a question & answer a few

Learn more about this course and start your FREE trial here: https://www.TheGreatCoursesPlus.com/universe?utm_source=US_OnlineVideo&utm_medium=SocialMediaEditorialYouTube&utm_campaign=149650
ProfessorNeil deGrasse Tyson will guide you through the mysteries of the universe in this fascinating course. Everything we now know about the universe—from the behavior of quarks to the birth of entire galaxies—has stemmed from scientists who’ve been willing to ponder the unanswerable.
So what is our latest picture of some of the most inexplicable features of the universe? What still remains to be uncovered? What are some of the next avenues of exploration for today’s chemists, physicists, biologists, and astronomers?
“We know a lot about the universe. But there’s even more that we don’t know,” ...

ScienceDocumentary 2016: The MathMysteryMathematics in Nature and Universe
Astrophysicist Mario Livio, along with a colorful cast of mathematicians, physicists, and engineers, follow math from Pythagoras to Einstein and beyond,
Documentary,Documentary (TV Genre),documentaries,Documentary,History­­,HD,discovery,history,2014,1080p,docume­n­tary films,full,bbc,Space,national ...BBC Documentay, HD Documentary, Full Documentary documentary films, documentary films english subtitles, documentary films national geographic, .
Mathematical mysteries have challenged humanity's most powerful thinkers and inspired passionate, lifelong obsessions in search of answers. From the ...
Season 42, Episode 17 - “The Great Math Mystery” An exploration of mathematics, including where it comes from and ...

published: 08 Jan 2016

Next in Science | Astronomy and Astrophysics | Part 1 || Radcliffe Institute

Neil deGrasse Tyson Astrophysics for People In a Hurry

Subscribe now to ScienceNET!
A new Neil interview - and it's 3 hours long, AND it's fantastic (one of his best IMO)! Astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson responds to viewer questions on a number of awesome things, and discusses his new book 'Astrophysics for People In a Hurry' in this enlightening interview.

X-radiation is only emitted by the hottest and most energetic parts of the Universe - sites of gigantic explosions, plasma heated to millions of degrees, and where there are intense magnetic or gravitational fields.
The transcript and downloadable versions of the lecture are available from the Gresham College website:
http://www.gresham.ac.uk/lectures-and-events/x-ray-astrophysics-the-high-energy-cosmos
Gresham College has been giving free public lectures since 1597. This tradition continues today with all of our five or so public lectures a week being made available for free download from our website. There is currently nearly 1,500 lectures free to access or download from the website.
Website: http://www.gresham.ac.uk
Twitter: http://twitter.com/GreshamCollege
Facebook: http://www.fa...

Albert Einstein - Theory of General Relativity - FULL AudioBook - Quantum Mechanics - Astrophysics - General relativity, or the general theory of relativity, is the geometric theory of gravitation published by Albert Einstein in 1916 and the current description of gravitation in modern physics. General relativity generalizes special relativity and Newton's law of universal gravitation, providing a unified description of gravity as a geometric property of space and time, or spacetime. In particular, the curvature of spacetime is directly related to the energy and momentum of whatever matter and radiation are present. The relation is specified by the Einstein field equations, a system of partial differential equations.
The predictions of general relativity have been confirmed in all observa...

published: 21 Nov 2012

1. Introduction

Frontiers/Controversies in Astrophysics (ASTR 160)
Professor Bailyn introduces the course and discusses the course material and requirements. The three major topics that the course will cover are (1) exoplanets--planets around stars other than the Sun, (2) black holes--stars whose gravitational pull is so strong that even their own light rays cannot escape, and (3) cosmology--the study of the Universe as a whole. Class proper begins with a discussion on planetary orbits. A brief history of astronomy is also given and its major contributors over the centuries are introduced: Ptolemy, Galileo, Copernicus, Kepler, and Newton.
00:00 - Chapter 1. Introduction
05:38 - Chapter 2. Topics of the Course
12:57 - Chapter 3. Course Requirements
21:03 - Chapter 4. Planetary Orbits
31:32 - Chap...

published: 29 Sep 2008

How to Study in Europe for Free - Erasmus Mundus Scholarships to Study Astronomy in Europe #ChetChat

How to Study in Europe for Free - Erasmus MundusScholarship for Indian Students to study AstronomyClick on this link to watch Aishwarya Girdhar talk about her masters in Astronomy in Europe with a full scholarship. She details how to apply for the Erasmus mundus scholarship, application process, documents required for Erasmus mundus master scholarships, Apostile and how it works, eligibility for the Erasmus Programme, how she secured the Astromundus scholarship to study astronomy. How to become an astronaut, master program in astrophysics,
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Go to http://mattbelair.com/luciddreaming for a free guide to lucid dreaming and guided meditation and more!
Nassim Haramein is an astrophysicist that has produced several groundbreaking theories that challenge the standard model of physics. His paper on quantum gravity and the holographic mass was confirmed with a greater accuracy than any other theoretical framework. in this discussion, Nassim has just returned from doing research in Egypt with the ResonanceScienceFoundation and we dive deep on the following;
- Nassim's thoughts on Egypt and the pyramids
- The possibility of ancient and advanced civilizations
- Why string theory doesn't work
- Why 1 + 1 can lead to infinity
- Quantum fluctuations and entanglement
- Modern physics and science to explain miracles
- The universe as a fee...

Astrophysicist Jeffrey Bennett on UFOs & more 08/13/2014

Alejandro with the news, and astrophysicist, former NASA scientist,Jeffery Bennett talks about the Big Bang, himself & his colleagues thoughts on UFOs, particle physics and much more! Check out his book: Beyond UFOs. His website is: www.jeffreybennett.com

Joe Rogan Experience #919 - Neil deGrasse Tyson

Max Loughan Nexus speech (13 year old physicist who created free energy device))

Subscribe to Max Loughan's page : 13 year old .
Subscribe to Max Loughan's page : 13 year old . Max Loughan is an inspiring young man with a big vision. “As cheesy as this sounds, from day one on this .
Max Loughan is an inspiring young man with a big vision. “As cheesy as this sounds, from day one on this planet, I knew I was put here for a reason. And that .

Neil deGrasse Tyson presents his new book "Astrophysics for People in a Hurry"at 92Y event. In the conversation he talks about the universe, dark matter, other dimensions, basic physics and more in his traditional entertaining way.

Neil deGrasse Tyson presents his new book "Astrophysics for People in a Hurry"at 92Y event. In the conversation he talks about the universe, dark matter, other dimensions, basic physics and more in his traditional entertaining way.

Professor Brian Cox Lecture on the universe

A lecture by Brian Cox on how the universe was created.
If you like this video please help me grow my channel by hitting that like button. Thanks guys! Oh & don...

A lecture by Brian Cox on how the universe was created.
If you like this video please help me grow my channel by hitting that like button. Thanks guys! Oh & dont forget all comments are welcome so leave one, or even ask a question & answer a few

A lecture by Brian Cox on how the universe was created.
If you like this video please help me grow my channel by hitting that like button. Thanks guys! Oh & dont forget all comments are welcome so leave one, or even ask a question & answer a few

Learn more about this course and start your FREE trial here: https://www.TheGreatCoursesPlus.com/universe?utm_source=US_OnlineVideo&utm_medium=SocialMediaEditor...

Learn more about this course and start your FREE trial here: https://www.TheGreatCoursesPlus.com/universe?utm_source=US_OnlineVideo&utm_medium=SocialMediaEditorialYouTube&utm_campaign=149650
ProfessorNeil deGrasse Tyson will guide you through the mysteries of the universe in this fascinating course. Everything we now know about the universe—from the behavior of quarks to the birth of entire galaxies—has stemmed from scientists who’ve been willing to ponder the unanswerable.
So what is our latest picture of some of the most inexplicable features of the universe? What still remains to be uncovered? What are some of the next avenues of exploration for today’s chemists, physicists, biologists, and astronomers?
“We know a lot about the universe. But there’s even more that we don’t know,” says astrophysicist and Professor Neil deGrasse Tyson, director of the Hayden Planetarium, an award-winning lecturer, and one of the world’s foremost experts on the secrets of the cosmos.
And Neil deGrasse Tyson’s course “The Inexplicable Universe: Unsolved Mysteries” is the perfect gateway into the mind-bending world of astrophysics.
Pondering the answers to these and other questions about astrophysics is a great way to appreciate the grandeur and complexity of the cosmos, better understand and discuss news and developments in science, and spark further interest in the universe.
This visually stunning course, which has been honored with a 2013 Telly Award for Outstanding Educational Program, features six self-contained lectures that transport you on a marvelous journey to the frontiers of the known (and unknown) universe and introduce you to tantalizing questions being addressed by the world’s top scientists.
Undeniably engaging and fascinating, this lecture series is a wonderful entrée to scientific pursuits that lie at the very heart of the history and nature of our universe.
In this Free Lecture: Scientists have made astounding progress in their grasp of the universe. But what remains to be understood? Investigate some perplexing aspects of space that science has uncovered in the last half-century. Learn about the mysterious trajectory of the Pioneer spacecraft (known as the “Pioneer anomaly”). Explore two of the longest-standing problems in astrophysics: dark matter and dark energy. And even try to map the shape of space-time.
Learn more about this course and start your FREE trial here: https://www.TheGreatCoursesPlus.com/universe?utm_source=US_OnlineVideo&utm_medium=SocialMediaEditorialYouTube&utm_campaign=149650
Check out more videos--including EXCLUSIVE interviews with Neil deGrasse Tyson--here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL2051CDC8CC6AE32E
and more here! https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLjlnbdCliaJEgqim5eTfDlciWrk5ClMoZ
And don't forget to subscribe to our channel...we are adding new videos all the time! https://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=TheGreatCourses

Learn more about this course and start your FREE trial here: https://www.TheGreatCoursesPlus.com/universe?utm_source=US_OnlineVideo&utm_medium=SocialMediaEditorialYouTube&utm_campaign=149650
ProfessorNeil deGrasse Tyson will guide you through the mysteries of the universe in this fascinating course. Everything we now know about the universe—from the behavior of quarks to the birth of entire galaxies—has stemmed from scientists who’ve been willing to ponder the unanswerable.
So what is our latest picture of some of the most inexplicable features of the universe? What still remains to be uncovered? What are some of the next avenues of exploration for today’s chemists, physicists, biologists, and astronomers?
“We know a lot about the universe. But there’s even more that we don’t know,” says astrophysicist and Professor Neil deGrasse Tyson, director of the Hayden Planetarium, an award-winning lecturer, and one of the world’s foremost experts on the secrets of the cosmos.
And Neil deGrasse Tyson’s course “The Inexplicable Universe: Unsolved Mysteries” is the perfect gateway into the mind-bending world of astrophysics.
Pondering the answers to these and other questions about astrophysics is a great way to appreciate the grandeur and complexity of the cosmos, better understand and discuss news and developments in science, and spark further interest in the universe.
This visually stunning course, which has been honored with a 2013 Telly Award for Outstanding Educational Program, features six self-contained lectures that transport you on a marvelous journey to the frontiers of the known (and unknown) universe and introduce you to tantalizing questions being addressed by the world’s top scientists.
Undeniably engaging and fascinating, this lecture series is a wonderful entrée to scientific pursuits that lie at the very heart of the history and nature of our universe.
In this Free Lecture: Scientists have made astounding progress in their grasp of the universe. But what remains to be understood? Investigate some perplexing aspects of space that science has uncovered in the last half-century. Learn about the mysterious trajectory of the Pioneer spacecraft (known as the “Pioneer anomaly”). Explore two of the longest-standing problems in astrophysics: dark matter and dark energy. And even try to map the shape of space-time.
Learn more about this course and start your FREE trial here: https://www.TheGreatCoursesPlus.com/universe?utm_source=US_OnlineVideo&utm_medium=SocialMediaEditorialYouTube&utm_campaign=149650
Check out more videos--including EXCLUSIVE interviews with Neil deGrasse Tyson--here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL2051CDC8CC6AE32E
and more here! https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLjlnbdCliaJEgqim5eTfDlciWrk5ClMoZ
And don't forget to subscribe to our channel...we are adding new videos all the time! https://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=TheGreatCourses

ScienceDocumentary 2016: The MathMysteryMathematics in Nature and Universe
Astrophysicist Mario Livio, along with a colorful cast of mathematicians, physicists, and engineers, follow math from Pythagoras to Einstein and beyond,
Documentary,Documentary (TV Genre),documentaries,Documentary,History­­,HD,discovery,history,2014,1080p,docume­n­tary films,full,bbc,Space,national ...BBC Documentay, HD Documentary, Full Documentary documentary films, documentary films english subtitles, documentary films national geographic, .
Mathematical mysteries have challenged humanity's most powerful thinkers and inspired passionate, lifelong obsessions in search of answers. From the ...
Season 42, Episode 17 - “The Great Math Mystery” An exploration of mathematics, including where it comes from and why it explains the physical

ScienceDocumentary 2016: The MathMysteryMathematics in Nature and Universe
Astrophysicist Mario Livio, along with a colorful cast of mathematicians, physicists, and engineers, follow math from Pythagoras to Einstein and beyond,
Documentary,Documentary (TV Genre),documentaries,Documentary,History­­,HD,discovery,history,2014,1080p,docume­n­tary films,full,bbc,Space,national ...BBC Documentay, HD Documentary, Full Documentary documentary films, documentary films english subtitles, documentary films national geographic, .
Mathematical mysteries have challenged humanity's most powerful thinkers and inspired passionate, lifelong obsessions in search of answers. From the ...
Season 42, Episode 17 - “The Great Math Mystery” An exploration of mathematics, including where it comes from and why it explains the physical

published:08 Jan 2016

views:124536

back

Next in Science | Astronomy and Astrophysics | Part 1 || Radcliffe Institute

Neil deGrasse Tyson Astrophysics for People In a Hurry

Subscribe now to ScienceNET!
A new Neil interview - and it's 3 hours long, AND it's fantastic (one of his best IMO)! Astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson respond...

Subscribe now to ScienceNET!
A new Neil interview - and it's 3 hours long, AND it's fantastic (one of his best IMO)! Astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson responds to viewer questions on a number of awesome things, and discusses his new book 'Astrophysics for People In a Hurry' in this enlightening interview.

Subscribe now to ScienceNET!
A new Neil interview - and it's 3 hours long, AND it's fantastic (one of his best IMO)! Astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson responds to viewer questions on a number of awesome things, and discusses his new book 'Astrophysics for People In a Hurry' in this enlightening interview.

X-radiation is only emitted by the hottest and most energetic parts of the Universe - sites of gigantic explosions, plasma heated to millions of degrees, and wh...

X-radiation is only emitted by the hottest and most energetic parts of the Universe - sites of gigantic explosions, plasma heated to millions of degrees, and where there are intense magnetic or gravitational fields.
The transcript and downloadable versions of the lecture are available from the Gresham College website:
http://www.gresham.ac.uk/lectures-and-events/x-ray-astrophysics-the-high-energy-cosmos
Gresham College has been giving free public lectures since 1597. This tradition continues today with all of our five or so public lectures a week being made available for free download from our website. There is currently nearly 1,500 lectures free to access or download from the website.
Website: http://www.gresham.ac.uk
Twitter: http://twitter.com/GreshamCollege
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Gresham-College/14011689941

X-radiation is only emitted by the hottest and most energetic parts of the Universe - sites of gigantic explosions, plasma heated to millions of degrees, and where there are intense magnetic or gravitational fields.
The transcript and downloadable versions of the lecture are available from the Gresham College website:
http://www.gresham.ac.uk/lectures-and-events/x-ray-astrophysics-the-high-energy-cosmos
Gresham College has been giving free public lectures since 1597. This tradition continues today with all of our five or so public lectures a week being made available for free download from our website. There is currently nearly 1,500 lectures free to access or download from the website.
Website: http://www.gresham.ac.uk
Twitter: http://twitter.com/GreshamCollege
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Gresham-College/14011689941

How to Study in Europe for Free - Erasmus MundusScholarship for Indian Students to study AstronomyClick on this link to watch Aishwarya Girdhar talk about her masters in Astronomy in Europe with a full scholarship. She details how to apply for the Erasmus mundus scholarship, application process, documents required for Erasmus mundus master scholarships, Apostile and how it works, eligibility for the Erasmus Programme, how she secured the Astromundus scholarship to study astronomy. How to become an astronaut, master program in astrophysics,
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How to Study in Europe for Free - Erasmus MundusScholarship for Indian Students to study AstronomyClick on this link to watch Aishwarya Girdhar talk about her masters in Astronomy in Europe with a full scholarship. She details how to apply for the Erasmus mundus scholarship, application process, documents required for Erasmus mundus master scholarships, Apostile and how it works, eligibility for the Erasmus Programme, how she secured the Astromundus scholarship to study astronomy. How to become an astronaut, master program in astrophysics,
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Go to http://mattbelair.com/luciddreaming for a free guide to lucid dreaming and guided meditation and more!
Nassim Haramein is an astrophysicist that has produ...

Go to http://mattbelair.com/luciddreaming for a free guide to lucid dreaming and guided meditation and more!
Nassim Haramein is an astrophysicist that has produced several groundbreaking theories that challenge the standard model of physics. His paper on quantum gravity and the holographic mass was confirmed with a greater accuracy than any other theoretical framework. in this discussion, Nassim has just returned from doing research in Egypt with the ResonanceScienceFoundation and we dive deep on the following;
- Nassim's thoughts on Egypt and the pyramids
- The possibility of ancient and advanced civilizations
- Why string theory doesn't work
- Why 1 + 1 can lead to infinity
- Quantum fluctuations and entanglement
- Modern physics and science to explain miracles
- The universe as a feedback loop
- Remote viewing
- The universe as a holographic fractal containing all the information of the whole.
- The real possibility of life and other intelligent civilizations
- The all new and ground-breaking Ark Crystal
- Nassim's top 3 changes to improve the world!
http://www.Resonance.is/zen & http://www.arkcrystals.com
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Go to http://mattbelair.com/luciddreaming for a free guide to lucid dreaming and guided meditation and more!
Nassim Haramein is an astrophysicist that has produced several groundbreaking theories that challenge the standard model of physics. His paper on quantum gravity and the holographic mass was confirmed with a greater accuracy than any other theoretical framework. in this discussion, Nassim has just returned from doing research in Egypt with the ResonanceScienceFoundation and we dive deep on the following;
- Nassim's thoughts on Egypt and the pyramids
- The possibility of ancient and advanced civilizations
- Why string theory doesn't work
- Why 1 + 1 can lead to infinity
- Quantum fluctuations and entanglement
- Modern physics and science to explain miracles
- The universe as a feedback loop
- Remote viewing
- The universe as a holographic fractal containing all the information of the whole.
- The real possibility of life and other intelligent civilizations
- The all new and ground-breaking Ark Crystal
- Nassim's top 3 changes to improve the world!
http://www.Resonance.is/zen & http://www.arkcrystals.com
Subscribe to Podcast: goo.gl/1euQe7
www.Gaia.com/MattBelair
www.spectrums.me/528 for all social links
Check out our amazing podcast sponsor Synctution and download 3 free futuristic, 3-D sound, binaural beat, Brain Wave entrainment meditation tracks here: bit.ly/gammawaves and use "ZEN2017" at checkout for $50 discount!
For Podcast, coaching, speaking, media and consulting inquiries - Matt@ZenAthlete.com
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May Love, Joy, Passion, Peace, and Prosperity fill your life!
Namaste,
~ MatthewBelair

Astrophysicist Jeffrey Bennett on UFOs & more 08/13/2014

Alejandro with the news, and astrophysicist, former NASA scientist,Jeffery Bennett talks about the Big Bang, himself & his colleagues thoughts on UFOs, particle...

Alejandro with the news, and astrophysicist, former NASA scientist,Jeffery Bennett talks about the Big Bang, himself & his colleagues thoughts on UFOs, particle physics and much more! Check out his book: Beyond UFOs. His website is: www.jeffreybennett.com

Alejandro with the news, and astrophysicist, former NASA scientist,Jeffery Bennett talks about the Big Bang, himself & his colleagues thoughts on UFOs, particle physics and much more! Check out his book: Beyond UFOs. His website is: www.jeffreybennett.com

Max Loughan Nexus speech (13 year old physicist who created free energy device))

Subscribe to Max Loughan's page : 13 year old .
Subscribe to Max Loughan's page : 13 year old . Max Loughan is an inspiring young man with a big vision. ...

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Max Loughan is an inspiring young man with a big vision. “As cheesy as this sounds, from day one on this planet, I knew I was put here for a reason. And that .

Subscribe to Max Loughan's page : 13 year old .
Subscribe to Max Loughan's page : 13 year old . Max Loughan is an inspiring young man with a big vision. “As cheesy as this sounds, from day one on this .
Max Loughan is an inspiring young man with a big vision. “As cheesy as this sounds, from day one on this planet, I knew I was put here for a reason. And that .

Neil deGrasse Tyson: How to Become an Astrophysicist

How did Neil deGrasse Tyson get hooked on science? Find out when the director of the Hayden Planetarium and host of StarTalk Radio answers a fan's question on how to become an astrophysicist. Plus, Neil answers comic co-host Chuck Nice's question about how to develop a love of science and physics before it's too late! Enjoy this StarTalk Radio "Behind the Scenes" video, which was shot the same day as we recorded our episode, "Cosmic Queries: Time-Keeping."
If you'd like to listen to that day's podcast (minus this clip), click here: http://www.startalkradio.net/show/cosmic-queries-time-keeping/. If you love StarTalk Radio, don't miss out on any StarTalk news. Sign up for our free newsletter: http://www.startalkradio.net/newsletter/youtube/
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How to Determine a Star's Radius : Astronomy & Astrophysics

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Determining a star's radius is something that you can't actually do directly. Find out how to determine a star's radius with help from an experienced and passionate educator in this free video clip.
Expert: Eylene Pirez
Filmmaker: bjorn wilde
SeriesDescription: Astronomy and astrophysics are very interesting and complicated topics that are more than worth exploring. Get tips on astronomy and astrophysics with help from an experienced and passionate educator in this free video series.

7:14

Day in the life: Astrophysicists

Rhaana Starling and Phil Evans are astrophysicists at the University of Leicester. They st...

Professor Brian Cox Lecture on the universe

A lecture by Brian Cox on how the universe was created.
If you like this video please help me grow my channel by hitting that like button. Thanks guys! Oh & dont forget all comments are welcome so leave one, or even ask a question & answer a few

2:09

Do You Need a PhD To Be an Astrophysicist?

What is an astrophysicist? Are all astrophysicists also physicists? Can you be one without...

Do You Need a PhD To Be an Astrophysicist?

What is an astrophysicist? Are all astrophysicists also physicists? Can you be one without having a PhD? Find out when your own personal astrophysicist, Neil deGrasse Tyson, explains the process to Chuck Nice. In return, Chuck schools Neil on what a “Padawan” is. (The force is strong with Chuck.)
This "Behind the Scenes" video was shot during the recording of our episode, "Cosmic Queries: Super Powers." If you'd like to listen to the full podcast, click here: http://www.startalkradio.net/show/cosmic-queries-super-powers/
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DAY IN THE LIFE of a CAMBRIDGE STUDENT (PHYSICS) | How to Cambridge Ep. 5

Who would have thought that studying Physics via Natural Sciences at CambridgeUniversity isn't exactly easy?
Hi guys! This week's How to Cambridge vlog is slightly different to the episodes I've put up so far, in that this week I filmed an entire day of my life rather than snippets over a few days. This is because I've been planning to film a "day in the life" style video for a long time, so you guys get a very comprehensive understanding of what it means to be a Cambridge Physicist.
I started the day off with a big bowl of porridge, and then headed to the library to do some supervision work, as well as some admin. I also checked my pigeonhole (or "pidge"), since I'd received some mail from graduate employers. It turns out, there are perks of going to Cambridge - you'll get free chocolates and playing cards because companies really want you to work for them.
After a very productive library session, I headed to the Cavendish (the Cambridge Physics department) for a lecture on Advanced QuantumCondensed Matter Physics. Let's just say, the lecturer is a legend!
Straight after this, I had a Relativistic Astrophysics and Cosmology supervision in the secondary site belonging to the Cavendish, but I had time to kill so I shot some pretty scenery for a while.
Finally, I ended the day with a Jesus College badminton session and a pizza. I think I deserved it after a long day of hard work, not having had a pizza in many months.
If you guys enjoyed this video, please give it a thumbs up and don't forget to leave me a comment telling me one thing you've been working on recently / one thing you'd like to work on in order to make yourself a better / more well rounded person!
The music in my vlogs is all original, i.e. written and recorded by myself. I record in Garageband. I film my videos on my Canon EOS M10 and iPhone 5s. I edit them in Shotcut, iMovie, and Adobe Lightroom.
Follow me on Instagram, Snapchat, and Twitter: @parthvlogs

3:12

How I spend my days as an astrophysicist | David Spergel '82

David Spergel '82 is a Professor of Astrophysics and Chair of the Department of Astrophysi...

How I spend my days as an astrophysicist | David Spergel '82

David Spergel '82 is a Professor of Astrophysics and Chair of the Department of Astrophysics at Princeton.
Q. How do you actually spend your days?
A. What I end up spending my day with varies from teaching, - right now I'm teaching the big Introductory Astronomy Class - so you're going in front of a lot of people and speaking; a lot of mentorship, a lot of working one-on-one with people from undergraduates to graduate students to postdocs. Now many of my former students are faculty members and I'll end up talking to them about their career…So mentoring people and working with them on projects, and developing them as scientists is a big part of what I do. At this point, also, I do a lot of things that might be really “political”. I am Chair of what's called the Space Studies Board and the National Academy of Sciences. The National Academy was set up by Abraham Lincoln to advise the federal government on science policy. In April, I was in Washington for nine days, and talked to people on the The Hill, the HouseScience Staff, the Senate Science Staff, talked to folks at OMBand OSTP at the White House. I spent a number of days at NASA headquarters talking to people there, and also served on the NASA Advisory Council. One of the other things that I do with NASA is running the Science DefinitionTeam for a big project. This is a project that’s really the successor to the Hubble Space Telescope in many ways. NASA was given a gift from the National Reconnaissance Organization of two telescopes that had not been launched, and I've been working on how we can use these telescopes to study everything from extrasolar planets to the basic properties of the universe (in terms of fielding questions on cosmology), and that work involves working with a team of really excellent people throughout the country: my co-chair at NASA and about 30 scientists at NASA and universities, and more broadly interesting, involving the whole astronomy communities: running conferences with a couple hundred people, writing reports, engaging people, building the political support and the scientific interest in the astronomy community to enable this mission. And this mission will be a two billion dollar mission, so this is a big project, and making things of this scale happen requires drawing together a consensus; bringing together a lot of people to work towards a common goal. So it's an interesting combination of scientific vision and political consensus-building skills. This is not something that was part of my physics classes. I've learned somewhat over the years about doing things like being a department chair, but in many ways I felt that Princeton prepared me for it in the other classes I took, and the other activities I was involved with outside of my core courses.
Find Mr. Spergel’s full interview here: https://careerservices.princeton.edu/node/2341
----------------------------------------­-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CAREER & LIFE VISION CONVERSATIONS is a video series by Princeton Career Services highlighting lessons learned by inspiring Princetonians. For the whole series visit: https://careerservices.princeton.edu/node/2191
----------------------------------------­-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Produced by LisaEinstein '13
Music by http://www.bensound.com/royalty-free-music
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2:27

NASA : The Art of Astrophysics - Imagining The Unseen

How do you visualize distant worlds that you can't see? A team of artists uses scientific ...

NASA : The Art of Astrophysics - Imagining The Unseen

How do you visualize distant worlds that you can't see? A team of artists uses scientific data to imagine exoplanets and other astrophysical phenomena.
The moon hanging in the night sky sent Robert Hurt’s mind into deep space -- to a region some 40 light years away, in fact, where seven Earth-sized planets crowded close to a dim, red sun.
Hurt, a visualization scientist at Caltech’s IPAC center, was walking outside his home in Mar Vista, California, shortly after he learned of the discovery of these rocky worlds around a star called TRAPPIST-1 and got the assignment to visualize them. The planets had been revealed by NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope and ground-based observatories.
“I just stopped dead in my tracks, and I just stared at it,” Hurt said in an interview. “I was imagining that could be, not our moon, but the next planet over – what it would be like to be in a system where you could look up and see continental features on the next planet.”
So began a kind of inspirational avalanche. Hurt and his colleague, multimedia producer Tim Pyle, developed a series of arresting, photorealistic images of what the new system’s tightly packed planets might look like -- so tightly packed that they would loom large in each other’s skies. Their visions of the TRAPPIST-1 system would appear in leading news outlets around the world.
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1:20:13

Neil deGrasse Tyson: Astrophysics for People in a Hurry.

Neil deGrasse Tyson presents his new book "Astrophysics for People in a Hurry"at 92Y event...

Neil deGrasse Tyson: Astrophysics for People in a Hurry.

Neil deGrasse Tyson presents his new book "Astrophysics for People in a Hurry"at 92Y event. In the conversation he talks about the universe, dark matter, other dimensions, basic physics and more in his traditional entertaining way.

ScienceDocumentary 2016: The MathMysteryMathematics in Nature and Universe
Astrophysicist Mario Livio, along with a colorful cast of mathematicians, physicists, and engineers, follow math from Pythagoras to Einstein and beyond,
Documentary,Documentary (TV Genre),documentaries,Documentary,History­­,HD,discovery,history,2014,1080p,docume­n­tary films,full,bbc,Space,national ...BBC Documentay, HD Documentary, Full Documentary documentary films, documentary films english subtitles, documentary films national geographic, .
Mathematical mysteries have challenged humanity's most powerful thinkers and inspired passionate, lifelong obsessions in search of answers. From the ...
Season 42, Episode 17 - “The Great Math Mystery” An exploration of mathematics, including where it comes from and why it explains the physical

Neil deGrasse Tyson: Astrophysics for People in a Hurry.

Neil deGrasse Tyson presents his new book "Astrophysics for People in a Hurry"at 92Y event. In the conversation he talks about the universe, dark matter, other dimensions, basic physics and more in his traditional entertaining way.

51:29

Professor Brian Cox Lecture on the universe

A lecture by Brian Cox on how the universe was created.
If you like this video please help...

Professor Brian Cox Lecture on the universe

A lecture by Brian Cox on how the universe was created.
If you like this video please help me grow my channel by hitting that like button. Thanks guys! Oh & dont forget all comments are welcome so leave one, or even ask a question & answer a few

1:04:52

'A Universe From Nothing' by Lawrence Krauss, AAI 2009

Lawrence Krauss gives a talk on our current picture of the universe, how it will end, and ...

Learn more about this course and start your FREE trial here: https://www.TheGreatCoursesPlus.com/universe?utm_source=US_OnlineVideo&utm_medium=SocialMediaEditorialYouTube&utm_campaign=149650
ProfessorNeil deGrasse Tyson will guide you through the mysteries of the universe in this fascinating course. Everything we now know about the universe—from the behavior of quarks to the birth of entire galaxies—has stemmed from scientists who’ve been willing to ponder the unanswerable.
So what is our latest picture of some of the most inexplicable features of the universe? What still remains to be uncovered? What are some of the next avenues of exploration for today’s chemists, physicists, biologists, and astronomers?
“We know a lot about the universe. But there’s even more that we don’t know,” says astrophysicist and Professor Neil deGrasse Tyson, director of the Hayden Planetarium, an award-winning lecturer, and one of the world’s foremost experts on the secrets of the cosmos.
And Neil deGrasse Tyson’s course “The Inexplicable Universe: Unsolved Mysteries” is the perfect gateway into the mind-bending world of astrophysics.
Pondering the answers to these and other questions about astrophysics is a great way to appreciate the grandeur and complexity of the cosmos, better understand and discuss news and developments in science, and spark further interest in the universe.
This visually stunning course, which has been honored with a 2013 Telly Award for Outstanding Educational Program, features six self-contained lectures that transport you on a marvelous journey to the frontiers of the known (and unknown) universe and introduce you to tantalizing questions being addressed by the world’s top scientists.
Undeniably engaging and fascinating, this lecture series is a wonderful entrée to scientific pursuits that lie at the very heart of the history and nature of our universe.
In this Free Lecture: Scientists have made astounding progress in their grasp of the universe. But what remains to be understood? Investigate some perplexing aspects of space that science has uncovered in the last half-century. Learn about the mysterious trajectory of the Pioneer spacecraft (known as the “Pioneer anomaly”). Explore two of the longest-standing problems in astrophysics: dark matter and dark energy. And even try to map the shape of space-time.
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ScienceDocumentary 2016: The MathMysteryMathematics in Nature and Universe
Astrophysicist Mario Livio, along with a colorful cast of mathematicians, physicists, and engineers, follow math from Pythagoras to Einstein and beyond,
Documentary,Documentary (TV Genre),documentaries,Documentary,History­­,HD,discovery,history,2014,1080p,docume­n­tary films,full,bbc,Space,national ...BBC Documentay, HD Documentary, Full Documentary documentary films, documentary films english subtitles, documentary films national geographic, .
Mathematical mysteries have challenged humanity's most powerful thinkers and inspired passionate, lifelong obsessions in search of answers. From the ...
Season 42, Episode 17 - “The Great Math Mystery” An exploration of mathematics, including where it comes from and why it explains the physical

1:23:14

Next in Science | Astronomy and Astrophysics | Part 1 || Radcliffe Institute

In 2015–2016, the Next in Science series focused on frontiers in astronomy and astrophysic...

Neil deGrasse Tyson Astrophysics for People In a Hurry

Subscribe now to ScienceNET!
A new Neil interview - and it's 3 hours long, AND it's fantastic (one of his best IMO)! Astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson responds to viewer questions on a number of awesome things, and discusses his new book 'Astrophysics for People In a Hurry' in this enlightening interview.

X-radiation is only emitted by the hottest and most energetic parts of the Universe - sites of gigantic explosions, plasma heated to millions of degrees, and where there are intense magnetic or gravitational fields.
The transcript and downloadable versions of the lecture are available from the Gresham College website:
http://www.gresham.ac.uk/lectures-and-events/x-ray-astrophysics-the-high-energy-cosmos
Gresham College has been giving free public lectures since 1597. This tradition continues today with all of our five or so public lectures a week being made available for free download from our website. There is currently nearly 1,500 lectures free to access or download from the website.
Website: http://www.gresham.ac.uk
Twitter: http://twitter.com/GreshamCollege
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Gresham-College/14011689941

How to Study in Europe for Free - Erasmus Mundus Scholarships to Study Astronomy in Europe #ChetChat

How to Study in Europe for Free - Erasmus MundusScholarship for Indian Students to study AstronomyClick on this link to watch Aishwarya Girdhar talk about her masters in Astronomy in Europe with a full scholarship. She details how to apply for the Erasmus mundus scholarship, application process, documents required for Erasmus mundus master scholarships, Apostile and how it works, eligibility for the Erasmus Programme, how she secured the Astromundus scholarship to study astronomy. How to become an astronaut, master program in astrophysics,
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Joe Rogan Experience #919 - Neil deGrasse Tyson...

Max Loughan Nexus speech (13 year old physicist wh...

In August 2016, a research plane was able to observe something strange in the atmosphere above Alaska's Aleutian Islands, lingering aerosol particle that was enriched with the same kind of uranium used in nuclear fuel and bombs, according to Gizmodo. The observation was the first time that scientists detected a particle free-floating in the atmosphere in over 20 years of plane-based observations ... ... -WN.com, Maureen Foody....

The United States said it "strongly disagrees" with the new declaration that effectively bans protests, with a U.S ... He also ruled out a transitional government ... Befekadu Hailu, a prominent blogger who has been jailed for his writings, urged Ethiopia's government to "carry out genuine reforms, negotiate with legitimate opposition groups and prepare the country for a free and fair election" to solve the unrest ... ....

One day in August 1995 a man called Foutanga Babani Sissoko walked into the head office of the Dubai Islamic Bank and asked for a loan to buy a car. The manager agreed, and Sissoko invited him home for dinner. It was the prelude, writes the BBC's Brigitte Scheffer, to one of the most audacious confidence tricks of all time. Over dinner, Sissoko made a startling claim ... With these powers, he could take a sum of money and double it ... ....

MEXICOCITY. A strong earthquake shook southern and central Mexico Friday, causing panic less than six months after two devastating quakes that killed hundreds of people. No buildings collapsed, according to early reports. But two towns near the epicenter, in the southern state of Oaxaca, reported damage and state authorities said they had opened emergency shelters ... It was also felt in the states of Guerrero, Puebla and Michoacan ... AFP ... ....

Mexico City – A military helicopter carrying officials assessing damage from a powerful earthquake crashed Friday in southern Mexico, killing 13 people and injuring 15, all of them on the ground. The Oaxaca state prosecutor’s office said in a statement that five women, four men and three children were killed at the crash site and another person died later at the hospital ...Alejandro Murat, neither of whom had serious injuries ... The U.S ... ....

Sarasota CountySchool District employees will now be able to receive free before- and after-school child care at district school locations, according to a decision at a school board workshop in late January.Nearly six months in the making, the decision came after chief financial officer Mitsi Corcoran was notified last year that a teacher was taking advantage of a school child care program for free, she said ... ....

A women’s group from a local technology consulting company is hosting a free career workshop in downtown Missoula this week that will include professional work clothing giveaways, free head shot photography, resume building and face-to-face advice ... ....

And now, to ensure that more and more people from Rajasthan get to see the film, the state’s Chief MinisterVasundhara Raje has made the film tax free... They both reiterated how the lack of low cost&nbsp;sanitary options ail the issue right now in the country. Akshay and Twinkle have gone on record to call for tax free sanitary pads and even better, free pads....

Author... 1518896518151810800 As a way of appreciating their valued customers and sharing enjoyable dining moments with them, McDonald’s gave out 1,000free McChickens on Feb ... A McDonald’s employee stood next to every store’s entrance to hand out coupons to guests that could be redeemed at the counter for a free McChicken. With that, McDonald’s managed to give out over 75,000 free McChickens to thousands of customers....

The arbitrator did the Browns a favor on Feb. 15 when he ruled A.J. McCarron will be an unrestricted free agent on March 14. The next question to be answered is whether coach Hue Jackson has enough power to persuade general manager John Dorsey that McCarron can be the bridge quarterback the Browns can win with while the quarterback Dorsey drafts develops .......

UNLV could have had its logo redesigned by Nike for free, according to the school’s apparel contract with the world-famous shoe company, but opted to pay almost $50,000 to use the Denver firm Adrenalin ... ....